ITP47 Deployment Operations
In collaboration with the North Pole Environmental Observatory, an Ice-Based Observatory consisting of ITP 47, and AOFB, an IMB, a PAWS, and webcam were to be deployed remotely in 2011 from the Russian ice camp Barneo using a Russian MI-8 helicopter. In order to avoid the added work, time, and logistics required to operate out of a remote camp as conducted in 2010 during ITP 38 deployment, this year the deployment operations were to be conducted while the helicopter waited at the site.
The deployment team and IBO instrument and equipment arrived from Longyearbyen, Svalbard to the Barneo ice camp on April 10 (located at 89° 12’ N, 138° 38’ E) where the conditions were clear and cold (-23°C). The evening consisted of coordinating with the camp managers and helicopter crew, and organizing and preparing the gear for the operations. The following day (still clear and cold), everything and everyone were loaded on the MI-8 helicopter and flown in little over an hour a distance of 175 km upstream to a large floe which was subsequently measured to be between 1.9 and 3.7 m thick.
While several holes were drilled to survey the ice and position the buoy array, all of the IBO equipment and apparatus were removed from the helicopter, except for those items which needed to stay warm (the air temperature remained around -23°C throughout the day). While one group installed the PAWS, another group began installation of the AOFB. When the PAWS was positioned, the first group subsequently worked on the webcam and IMB installations. When the AOFB was installed, the second group began the ITP deployment. Only a short break was taken for lunch and to warm up. Eight hours after landing, the IBO was completely deployed, all of the deployment gear was back onboard, and the helicopter departed from the floe.